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Grafana Dash Gen

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A collection of utility classes to construct and publish grafana graphs. The library is built ground up to incorporate grafana terminologies.

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Code to generate the dashboard

You will be able to generate and publish a grafana graph using the following steps.

Step 1: Configure grafana

if you would like grafana to publish your dashboard you need this step. If you do not need grafana to publish your dashboard, you can skip this step.

const grafana = require('grafana-dash-gen');
const Row = grafana.Row;
const Dashboard = grafana.Dashboard;
const Panels = grafana.Panels;
const Target = grafana.Target;
const Templates = grafana.Templates;
const Alert = grafana.Alert;
const Condition = grafana.Condition;

grafana.configure({
	url: 'https://your.grafana.com/elasticsearch/grafana-dash/dashboard/',
	cookie: 'auth-openid=someidhere'
});

Step 2: Create a dashboard

const dashboard = new Dashboard({
	title: 'Api dashboard'
});

(or) Below is an example of a dashboard with a custom slug, templates dc and smoothing and annotations.

 const dashboard = new Dashboard({
 	title: 'Api dashboard',
 	slug: 'api',
 	templating: [{
 		name: 'dc',
 		options: ['dc1', 'dc2']
 	}, {
 		name: 'smoothing',
 		options: ['30min', '10min', '5min', '2min', '1min']
 	}],
 	annotations: [{
 		name: 'Deploy',
 		target: 'stats.$dc.production.deploy'
 	}]
 });

If you do not wish to have any templates and annotations

Step 3: Create a new row

As said abolve, grafana dashboard contains a number of rows.

const row = new Row();

Step 4: Create graphs to add to the row

There are two ways to add the graph to a row. Pass it while a graph is created as below

const panel = new Panels.Graph({
	title: 'api req/sec',
	span: 5, 
	targets: [
		new Target('api.statusCode.*').
					transformNull(0).sum().hitcount('1seconds').scale(0.1).alias('rps')
	],
	row: row,
	dashboard: dashboard
});

(or) add it in a separate step

const panel = new Panels.Graph({
	title: 'api req/sec',
	span: 5,
	targets: [
		new Target('api.statusCode.*').
					transformNull(0).sum().hitcount('1seconds').scale(0.1).alias('rps')
	]
});
row.addPanel(panel);

If you would like to create a full width single stat (as in the image) the code is below. Notice how we create a new row on the fly.

const requestVolume = new Panels.SingleStat({
	title: 'Current Request Volume',
	postfix: 'req/sec',
	targets: [
		new Target('stats.$dc.counts').
				sum().scale(0.1)
	],
	row: new Row(),
	dashboard: dashboard
});

Step 5: Create an alert and add it to the graph

Alerts are optional. An alert is set on a target, each target added to the panel receives a refId of 'A', 'B', ..., 'Z'.

const conditionOnRequestLowVolume = new Condition()
        .onQuery('A')
        .withEvaluator(1, 'lt')
        .withReducer('max');

const alert = new Alert({ name: 'Low volume of requests' });
alert.addCondition(conditionOnRequestLowVolume);

// OR 

const alert = new Alert({ name: 'Low volume of requests' })
        .addCondition(conditionOnRequestLowVolume);

requestVolume.addAlert(alert);

It is also possible to add an alert by passing it to the Graph constructor

const graphWithAnAlert = new Graph({ alert: YOUR_ALERT_OBJECT });

Step 6: Publish the graph

grafana.publish(dashboard);

to generate the json and not publish use

console.log(JSON.stringify(dashboard.generate()));

A complete example of a dashboard is provided in example.js


Installation

npm install grafana-dash-gen

Tests

npm test

Contributors

MIT Licenced